Performance #1: | |
Date Performance |
1999-09-14 | Running Time |
3:36 | Performers |
Sheryl Crow (Vocals), Sheryl Crow (Electric Guitars), Sheryl Crow (Acoustic Guitars), Sheryl Crow (Bass), Sheryl Crow (Harmonica), Tim Smith (Electric Guitar), Tim Smith (Bass), Tim Smith (Background Vocals), Jim Bogios (Drums), Jim Bogios (Background Vocals), Mike(y) Rowe (Keyboards), Pete(r) Stroud (Acoustic Guitars), Pete(r) Stroud (Electric Guitars), Pete(r) Stroud (Lead Guitars), Pete(r) Stroud (Slide Guitars), Natalie Maines (Vocals), Martie Seidel (Fiddle), Martie Seidel (Background Vocals), Emily Robison (Banjo), Emily Robison (Background Vocals) | Comments | (Featuring The Dixie Chicks) | Appears On | | Performance #2: | |
|
Running Time |
3:21 | Performers |
Sheryl Crow (Vocals), Stevie Nicks (Vocals), Ben(mont) (M.) Tench(, III) (Hammond B3), Tim Smith (Acoustic Guitar), Scott Troy Thurston (Acoustic Guitar), Jeff Trott (Bass), Jim Bogios (Bongos), Bruce Bouton (Pedal Steel), Chris Lord-Alge (Mixed By) | Comments | by Sheryl Crow (featuring Stevie Nicks) Sheryl Crow appears courtesy of A&M Records, a division of UMG Recordings, Inc. (P) & (C) 1998 Viacom International Inc. Sheryl Crow: "When I was a kid there wasn't any VH1 or MTV. I'm sure a lot of you probably remember those days before videos and before all the entertainment magazines and celebrity vehicles. Every couple of weeks on a Friday, every kid in town would be down at Blakemore Drug with their head in a Rolling Stone Magazine or in Cream Magazine, and that was my perception of rock and roll, that's what I wanted to be. I wanted to be the person in the black and white picture. I've been really lucky in my career, in my reasonably short career, to get to play with a lot of the people that were in those magazines. I'm getting the most unbelievable opportunity tonight because I get to sing with Stevie Nicks. We'll just say a little bit about this song. Stevie and I were talking about this song the other night." Stevie Nicks: "When I first heard this song, 'Are You Strong Enough To Be My Man,' I didn't hear it on the radio. I saw it in a video, on MTV or VH1. I meant to say I saw it on VH1. It was the middle of the night and I was sitting there by myself. I will never forget this. Sheryl came on and she sings this song, and I thought, 'For women like Sheryl and I who have this extreme kind of career, every time we meet a nice, new man, it crosses our mind: 'Are you strong enough to possibly deal with our incredibly odd life?' So, from that moment onward I thought, 'This is a great song for any women that have extreme careers.'" | Appears On | |
|